Dreamland: Difference between revisions
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===Counterinvasion of Dreamland=== | ===Counterinvasion of Dreamland=== | ||
The Latiki army entered Dreamland and began its conventional war much more quickly than the Dreamers had earlier; they were there within months, whereas the Dreamers had taken three years to reach Paba and another three years to give up. The Dreamers were weak, but had regrouped, and had several advantages: they were fighting a defensive war in mountainous terrain, which they were well accustomed to; there was no significant dissent in Dreamland, whereas Vaamū was on the brink of civil war; and the Dreamer soldiers were physically superior to the Latiki, both because they were taller and because they were better armed. This last difference was not due to Vaamū's young population, as even now the army still only allowed adult males, but because of a combination of the Vaamū people's naturally small stature and a persistent famine. | |||
Against this, the Latiki soldiers had only intangibles: they were more obedient than the Dreamers, because they knew that the Dreamers would refuse to accept defectors; and they were mostly people who had left family back home and were fighting not just for Vaamū but for the possibility of returning home to their families and giving them the guarantee of safety. Even so, the Latiki generals motivated their soldiers by promising them control of Dreamland after the war, so that people who wanted to stay in Dreamland could gain power by doing so, and if they wanted, also bring their families. | |||
The Latiki generals were well-educated ,but had never fought an offensive war. They knew that Dreamland's strategy for invading Paba had failed, however, and sought to ensure they did not copy Dreamland's strategy. Rather than trying to force Dreamland into surrender by encircling the coast and causing a famine, they decided to attack the army head-on. | The Latiki generals were well-educated, but had never fought an offensive war. They knew that Dreamland's strategy for invading Paba had failed, however, and sought to ensure they did not copy Dreamland's strategy. Rather than trying to force Dreamland into surrender by encircling the coast and causing a famine, they decided to attack the army head-on. | ||
Despite the Dreamers' earlier humiliating defeat and their foreknowledge of their coming invasion, the Dreamers were ill-prepared for the next phase of the war. Both nations had a standing army of about 1 million adults, with the Dreamer army being physically more powerful and better armed, and having the advantage of occupying difficult terrain. But the Latiki army invaded from the north, and they quickly cornered the Dreamer battalion holding that stretch of land into a peninsula, where they were forced to surrender. This early victory was due to a quirk of Dreamland's geography: its northern border was easy to invade and difficult to defend. | Despite the Dreamers' earlier humiliating defeat and their foreknowledge of their coming invasion, the Dreamers were ill-prepared for the next phase of the war. Both nations had a standing army of about 1 million adults, with the Dreamer army being physically more powerful and better armed, and having the advantage of occupying difficult terrain. But the Latiki army invaded from the north, and they quickly cornered the Dreamer battalion holding that stretch of land into a peninsula, where they were forced to surrender. This early victory was due to a quirk of Dreamland's geography: its northern border was easy to invade and difficult to defend. |
Revision as of 19:03, 2 November 2017
Dreamland was a nation founded in the northwestern corner of the continent of Rilola by immigrants from the islands of Laba.
Language
The language was closely related to that of its enemy Kava. The proper name for their shared proto-language is Meromo. It has many loanwords from Pejo, and Pejo itself was spoken by some of the early settlers.
Phonology and diachronics
NOTE, try to evolve a "Nomisitamīlina" type phonology here (that is, mostly or entirely CV, with vowel length, and with an /l/ and a mostly polynesian-type setup otherwise). Unless it's Kava that has that.
Since dreamland was a mix of fun and labans,it can be that the phonology was the intersection of kava & laban .
Thus e.g. all sibs>s,labs>b/p,etc
Consonants of proto-Dreamlandic
Labials: /p b m f β w/ Alveolars: /t d n s z/ Postalveolars: /č ǯ ñ š j ž/ Velars: /k ŋ/
Note that /ŋ/ was realized as nasalization of the preceding vowel except before a stop consonant, in which case it assimilated to that consonant. Thus, the sound [ŋ] is actually very rare.
Unlike the closely related Kava, the voiced stops /b d ǯ/ were preserved. However, there was no corresponding voiced velar stop /ġ/.
Vowels of proto-Dreamlandic
/a e i o u/
There is a four-way contrast of à/ă/ā/á for tones, although á is rare.
Early depalataization
The palatals /č ǯ ñ š ž/ changed to /k d ŋ f v/ before the back vowel [u], and to the coronals /t d n s z/ elsewhere. This new /ŋ/ was a true sound, unlike the old ŋ which merely nasalized the preceding vowel, even between two vowels. However, this new sound proved more stable, and the only ŋ also became a true velar nasal. Note that the /f/ above can be considered a variant of |h| but that this language simply did not have an /h/.
Further changes
/f/ > /h/ in most positions, possibly sometimes to /p/.
Then, /β/ > /v/ unconditionally. (Possibly a spelling change for convenience, not a true sound change.) Due to Laban influence, possibly sometimes to /b/.
Any remaining tones or tone residues are smothered here, leaving only vowel length. Long vowels may be spelled double (think of "Peepa" etc) rather than with macrons as in other languages, but this is a stylistic choice rather than a feature of the language itself.
Further growth
There will be little further growth here, as the formation of Dreamlandic may have been as late as 3700 AD, which is only a few hundred years from their participation in wars against their larger neighbors such as Anzan. The language used for names in the stories can therefore be assumed to be equivalent to the proto-language rather than a daughter of it.
NOTE: It's possible that this language will fill a void left by the removal of Ogili and Ogili II from the storyline. If so, it is because, although Anzan conquered ~80% of Dreamland, the original Dreamlandic language survived in the other 20% and then spread back outward, probably dividing into various daughter languages as it did so.
Geography and climate
Climate
Dreamland is oriented primarily east-to-west, but with a slight tilt that puts the eastmost cities at higher latitudes than the west. As a whole, Dreamland stretches from 17°N to 35°N and from 32°W to 3°W.
Temperature
Latitude has little influence on temperature in Dreamland; the climate of any given city is determined primarily by its location with respect to the seas and mountain ranges that define the terrain of Dreamland.
Cities south of the peaks of the mountains experiences southerly winds year-round, with no significant wet season. The air is very humid because of the influence of the wide but shallow Sea of Baeba to the south, but rain is uncommon. Irregular tropical storms provide much of the rainfall to coastal areas. Temperatures are warm in winter and very hot in summer.
Inland summer temperatures are even hotter: as hot as those of deep-inland locations such as Lypelpyp, and considerably more humid, thus giving Dreamland a claim to the world's hottest summers, about level with those of inland areas in AlphaLeap, Taryte, and the desert of Dahàwu. The capital of Dreamland, Fakadàne, is founded on an inland lake surrounded by small mountains. Here, the summer temperatures are the same as Lypelpyp's, but the humidity is much higher; during winter, the temperatures are much warmer than Lypelpyp's and never fall below freezing.
Along the north coast, the wind can blow from any direction in any season, and the wind direction determines the type of weather experienced. Yet, frost is entirely unknown in winter even at the highest latitudes along the north coast. This is in sharp contrast to locations further east at the same latitude, where frost occurs on more than half of the winter nights and snow is common for several months of the year. During the summer, the temperatures equal or exceed those of deep-inland forested locations such as Blop, with maritime cooling being limited to offshore islands and a few scattered headlands with long west-facing shorelines. The temperatures along the north coast are not as hot as those in the desert locations mentioned above, but they are still fairly humid, so even the north coast of Dreamland is known for its oppressively hot summers.
Even in the highest mountains, winter temperatures are still mild, since there is no source of cold air nearby. However, summer temperatures are considerably cooler in the highlands than along the coasts due to the thick cloud cover and very frequent rainfall. Thus the coolest areas of Dreamland have the most vegetation and, often, the healthiest wildlife populations.
Rainfall
As above, the coastal areas of Dreamland never experience frost, even in the extreme north at 35° latitude. The far north experiences a short rainy season during the late winter, but for most of the year remains dry. There is no summer monsoon, so the rest of Dreamland is relatively arid all year long, despite a high relative humidity. However, rainfall is common along the south slopes of the mountains, and in winter, also some of the north slopes. Thus, lakes and rivers provide Dreamers plenty of water to build cities to live in, and tropical agriculture is possible.
Wildlife and natural threats to humans
Dreamland's climate is ideal for human habitation. However, it is among the least densely populated areas of the planet for humans because it is also the ideal climate for many species that prey on humans.
Firebirds
Chief among these is the firebird, a close relative of the seagull which in recent evolutionary history evolved from a fish-based diet to a diet consisting almost entirely of land animals, including humans.
Firebirds cannot digest hair, so their choice of land prey is limited to humans, preferably those wearing loose,skimpy clothes. Pigs have sharp teeth here and thus do not make easy prey. Humans have ounterattcked the firebirds by building large cities, in whi b the humans can fight the firebirds by swarming, but the success rAte is still very low. These cities are most on the coast where easy prey in the form of fish is also available for both humAns and firebirds.
Firebirds are ambush predators, preferring to remain out of sight, hidden by shelter or other natural formations, and then swoop on a human from behind. They prefer to dive on a human from above at maximum speed, push the human to the ground, and then incapacitate the human by biting off a hand or other vulnerable body part. By this time, in most cases, the human has already suffered rapid blood loss from the impact of the bird's beak cutting into their body at high speed, and further resistance from the human tends to be weak.
Because their first attack is almost invariably to bite off the human's right hand, humans' defense is limited to small, one-handed weapons that are little threat to firebirds. In most cases, the human will bleed to death from their rapidly accumulated wounds without effectively fighting back against the firebird, but if the human is able to counterattack, or strong enough to stand up and flee, the firebird can quickly retreat to safety and attempt a second attack when its human prey is further weakened by blood loss and other injuries.
Other land predators
Firebirds mostly stay close to the seacoast despite their diet, as the high temperatures of the interior in summer will quickly exhaust them. But humans are not safe inland either because the interior of Dreamland is home to several other predators who hunt humans, such as pigs, desert wolves, and wildcats. There are also eagles, who hunt humans in a very similar manner to the firebirds near the coast, but humans are not their preferred prey.
Animal attacks at sea
Off the north coast of Dreamland, humans are even more vulnerable, because they are preyed upon by sharks and other fish, as well as, to a lesser extent, by seals and other aquatic mammals. Firebirds are also known to travel miles out to sea, using their keen eyesight to spot humans on their watercraft from the distant shore. However, the ocean is also the primary food source for humans in Dreamland, even those living far inland, and therefore humans on boats are keenly aware of their predators and will put up a ferocious struggle to survive an attack by any of the aforementioned animals. Dreamers generally build themselves large boats with sheltered areas into which they can retreat should they be attacked by a firebird. Seals generally hunt by ramming their bodies through the lower deck of the humans' boats, to which the human response is to use their fishing spears to fight back against the seal.
Humans as prey of pack animals
Most of the predators of humans are solitary hunters, and will attack humans at their most vulnerable: when they are alone, and generally when they are unarmed. However, firebirds have been known to attack in flocks as well, in which dozens or even hundreds of firebirds will simultaneously descend on a human city and carry out the same types of attacks they use when they attack one-on-one. Generally, each bird will alternate between stages of actively attacking and resting on top of buildings, out of humans' reach. A mass firebird attack can last for an entire day. The birds on the buildings keep watch for the others, and will attack any humans attempting to flee. Because a human attempting to flee has a reduced ability to defend themselves, these people are the most vulnerable and the most likely to die in a mass attack. Humans who stick together have a better survival rate in these battles, even though they are likely to face multiple firebirds attacking them from all directions. Humans always cluster together in circles where each individual faces outward, meaning that firebirds can only attack them from the front, where they are stronger and better able to protect themselves. Here, sometimes two birds will attack the same human, usually with one biting off the arms or hands and the other attempting to break or otherwise disable their legs and feet. When this happens, the humans who are free for the moment will attempt to grab onto the wings of each bird and pull them off of the other human. Since this requires the use of both hands, this leaves the humans open to attack from behind from another bird, and in some cases chains of birds and humans biting and grasping each other will form long lines or even loops as each animal tries to get the better of the other.
Politics and government
Founding and early history
Dreamland was founded in 3373 by settlers from the islands of Laba who spoke only the Pejo language and had been completely isolated from the wars and politics of the mainland for thousands of years.[1] Dreamland was an explicitly political nation: rather than being founded on the basis of membership in a particular tribe or belief in a particular religion, people living in Dreamland were made to agree to certain political beliefs.
The dark-skinned Pejo people partnered with the typically blonde, blue-eyed Meromo people local to the area to form a new nationality, Gãm, in which people of all races and religions would live in harmony and cease all internal conflicts and wars. The Gãm leaders announced a new constitution prohibiting the use of the army except for defensive wars. The new society was named Dreamland and consisted of preexisting settlements along the north shore of the peninsula around Baeba Swamp.
After a few months in Dreamland, the Gãm leaders launched an all-out war against the Crystals, whom they said were frustrating the Gãms' attempt to build a society of racial harmony. They declared that nobody of the Crystal race would be allowed to enter Dreamland, and conversion would be forbidden. Since the Crystals' capital city, Baeba, lay only a few hundred miles away from Dreamland, the Dreamer military generals realized that Dreamland was in fact fighting a defensive war, because if they did not invade and conquer Baeba Swamp, the Crystals might one day in the future be able to mount a counterattack against Dreamland.
Early subdivisions
Shortly after its founding, the Dreamers divided their nation into six states. These corresponded loosely to six preexisting Crystal nations which they had taken over. Dreamland considered itself a single nation, but its constituent states had more independence than did the states of the nations of the other empires.
Latiki War
In 4132, Dreamland declared war against the famine-struck empire of AlphaLeap. AlphaLeap had recently moved its capital to the ancient city of Paba, whose population consisted largely of young children whose parents had starved to death or been killed in recent wars and natural disasters. When theses children learned they were being invaded, they surrendered 90% of their empire to the Dreamers, and stated that they would only fight back if the Dreamers decided to also invade the remaining 10%, which contained Paba and some other important cities.
The Dreamer generals celebrated their hard-fought victory over the starving children of AlphaLeap, but considered it dishonorable to invade a country and not finish the job. Therefore, they decided that they would indeed invade Paba and fight it out in the streets against the local peasants. The Pabaps had been expecting this, however, and learned of the continued invasion beforehand by communication from trade routes. They evacuated most of the Pabap countryside, leaving the farms barren throughout the harvest season. Instead, farmers retreated to the southern coast, which still had a plentiful supply of fish so long as the people were willing to sail great distances out to sea. Paba itself remained settled, however, and the Pabaps expected that a great battle would soon take place there.
First combat
Paba had long been a strong proponent of pacifism. However, when AlphaLEAP had taken over their empire and relocated its capital there, they integrated the Pabaps into the wider Leaper military and developed a more conventional military policy. But the reputation for Paba's poor performance in past military conflicts had spread, and the Dreamer generals told their soldiers that Paba would fall easily to an invasion unless the Pabaps were able to call in soldiers from those areas of the empire that had been ceded to Dreamland upon the original declaration of war. Since Dreamland had already occupied much of this territory, and seen that the cities were mostly still populated, they concluded that Paba likely had not been able to draw in many soldiers from these areas, and that their original prediction of an easy war would be correct. Furthermore, as they realized that Paba had a very young population, they realized the city of Paba itself would be likely overrun by orphaned children who would surrender to any soldier willing to adopt them.
Although it was true that Paba had relatively few adult males, and that they had not been able to call in many of the adults from the ceded areas of their Empire to fight, the Pabap generals were nevertheless able to field a conventional army consisting of adult male soldiers to wait for the invading Dreamers at a safe distance from Paba's city center. They also constructed a second front near the coast, figuring that the Dreamers, who were also a seagoing people, knew that Paba's food supply relied on the ocean and that, if the Dreamers pushed the Pabaps off the coastline, both civilians and soldiers would starve.
The Pabap army put up stiff resistance, such that the Dreamers were unable to break through and reach Paba itself. More Pabaps than Dreamers were dying in this war, but most Pabap casualties were due to disease and continuing struggles with finding food, since the soldiers' supply of food from the sea was unreliable.
Latiki counter-invasion
After six years of war, the Dreamers still had not yet sieged Paba. Without formally admitting defeat, the Dreamer generals began to pull back their soldiers and focus on building new Dreamer settlements in the countryside that the Pabaps had surrendered to them at the beginning of the war. But they also suspected a counterattack was coming, and that the target would be Dreamland itself rather than its colonies, since the Dreamer military had been largely excused through the six years of war.
The counterattack was led by a group of Pabaps calling itself the Latiki party. Throughout its long history, Paba had always been a monarchy, and political parties had never existed until they were conquered by AlphaLeap, which allowed only the Leaper party to hold power and considered political parties to be synonymous with nations. But now for the first time, dissent had arisen within a nation, and Paba had two political parties.
The Latiki party rejected pacifism and stated that Paba was now a military champion and could seek its own interests rather than forever being subservient other, more violent empires as they had throughout their history. They decided to launch a direct invasion of Dreamland, exactly mirroring Dreamland's invasion of Paba six years earlier. They restored Paba's claim to all of the land that they had earlier ceded, and claimed that they would reconquer it back for Paba after they had first defeated the home nation of Dreamland.
As the Latiki army roved towards the north, they faced some resistance, both from the Dreamers and a few citizens who had decided to side with the Dreamers. The strongest of these was the small nation of Puap (Pwâet), located in the region of Subumpam. However, the Puap army decided to spare Paba and instead attack the tail of the Latiki army that was heading towards Dreamland. They thus stated that they were not declaring war against Paba, but against the Latiki political party, and that Puap considered itself loyal to Paba.
Latiki-Leaper relations
The Dreamers soon learned that Paba's young population had become even younger, with the median age of many Pabap cities in the single digits. This was due to many factors: the war, the famine, and the tradition among Pabaps to put the lives of children ahead of their parents', even if it meant orphanhood for the survivors. With children left to fend for themselves, Paba collapsed into pestilential conditions and the intensity of the famine increased even as the weather began to turn in their favor. Disease coursed through the population, killing many of the orphans who no longer had doctors to care for them. Though fish in the ocean remained abundant, young sea captains had difficulty steering the ships and they became increasingly fearful of attempting to fish away from the immediate shore.
To compensate for the drastically reduced population of able-bodied adults, Paba's ruling Leaper party instituted child labor, with a focus on personal hygiene in order to reduce disease and dispose of waste. Earlier, hygiene had been abandoned, with Pabap nurses simply throwing dirty diapers into a pile in the middle of each city, figuring that local animals would take care of the problem over time. The Leapers realized that it would be cruel to force children to work, but that it was far more cruel to enlist them into the army, and that both the army and the civilian labor force were necessary to keep a nation's population alive and healthy.
But the local government of Paba, which consisted entirely of women and children, disobeyed the command to introduce child labor, and became increasingly loyal to the militant Latiki party, claiming that the Leapers had merely made Paba the latest in a long series of societies which the Leapers had victimized. Since the Latiki party had launched an invasion of Dreamland, the army was now also loyal to the Latiki party, which meant that the Leaper government was no longer able to enforce its rule in Paba, and was in danger of losing its hold on the remainder of the Empire, which had been renamed Vaamū by the Latiki governors.
Among the boys running the Latiki party in Paba, an even more militant sort had arisen: they wanted to destroy not just Dreamland, but every other nation on the planet, and every other political party, including the Leapers. But the generals still pressed on to invade Dreamland and Dreamland only, promising the boys back home that they would have time to destroy the rest of the planet once Dreamland had been subdued.
Counterinvasion of Dreamland
The Latiki army entered Dreamland and began its conventional war much more quickly than the Dreamers had earlier; they were there within months, whereas the Dreamers had taken three years to reach Paba and another three years to give up. The Dreamers were weak, but had regrouped, and had several advantages: they were fighting a defensive war in mountainous terrain, which they were well accustomed to; there was no significant dissent in Dreamland, whereas Vaamū was on the brink of civil war; and the Dreamer soldiers were physically superior to the Latiki, both because they were taller and because they were better armed. This last difference was not due to Vaamū's young population, as even now the army still only allowed adult males, but because of a combination of the Vaamū people's naturally small stature and a persistent famine.
Against this, the Latiki soldiers had only intangibles: they were more obedient than the Dreamers, because they knew that the Dreamers would refuse to accept defectors; and they were mostly people who had left family back home and were fighting not just for Vaamū but for the possibility of returning home to their families and giving them the guarantee of safety. Even so, the Latiki generals motivated their soldiers by promising them control of Dreamland after the war, so that people who wanted to stay in Dreamland could gain power by doing so, and if they wanted, also bring their families.
The Latiki generals were well-educated, but had never fought an offensive war. They knew that Dreamland's strategy for invading Paba had failed, however, and sought to ensure they did not copy Dreamland's strategy. Rather than trying to force Dreamland into surrender by encircling the coast and causing a famine, they decided to attack the army head-on.
Despite the Dreamers' earlier humiliating defeat and their foreknowledge of their coming invasion, the Dreamers were ill-prepared for the next phase of the war. Both nations had a standing army of about 1 million adults, with the Dreamer army being physically more powerful and better armed, and having the advantage of occupying difficult terrain. But the Latiki army invaded from the north, and they quickly cornered the Dreamer battalion holding that stretch of land into a peninsula, where they were forced to surrender. This early victory was due to a quirk of Dreamland's geography: its northern border was easy to invade and difficult to defend.
The Latiki army conquered no major Dreamer cities during this battle, but the victory surprised the Dreamer generals, and the Dreamer civilians were horrified when they realized what was about to happen to them. They realized that during the Dreamers' six-year campaign to invade and conquer Paba, they had never reached any civilian territory at all, since the countryside had been evacuated and the people remaining in the cities were protected by a sturdy wall of soldiers who were ready to die to save their families living close behind them. Yet it had taken the Latiki army only a few days to penetrate Dreamland and claim their first civilian casualties.
Further battles in Dreamland
The easy conquest of the northeastern headlands had given the Latiki army 1/3 of the coastline of the Dreamer state of Tēyexīl, which contained the vast majority of Dreamland's population. From the enslaved Dreamer civilians, the Latikis learned that most of Dreamland's population was concentrated in two cities, Gadanas near the coast and Xʷakaràna, the imperial capital, further upstream.[2] By conquering these two cities, the Latiki army realized they could conquer Dreamland. They realized that the Dreamers had been fools to invade Paba several years earlier, when they had been given control of the vast majority of AlphaLeap's territory with no struggle at all. Though the Latiki knew that they would be fighting an uphill battle in difficult terrain, they believed that they would easily defeat the two Dreamer cities and force a total surrender.
When the Dreamers realized that the Latiki army was advancing on Gadanas, they relocated their entire military to the river just downstream from the city, leaving the rest of their territory, including Fakarana, undefended. Here they advanced towards the Latiki, intending to deny them as much territory as possible. The Latiki army was also traveling as a single unit, betting everything on the Battle of Gadanas, where they vowed to fight agaisnt the disadvantages of terrain, physical inferiority, and the civilian resistance. They realized that, though it had not been their intent, they were about to cut off both Dreamer cities from the sea, and knew that the Dreamers would starve if the battle ended in a stalemate.
The two armies met up several miles from the sea, where the Dreamers balanced their desire to fight on superior terrain with their need to prevent the Latiki from penetrating too far inland. The Dreamer civilians started fires that spread only downstream, intending to weaken the Latiki soldiers without weakening the Dreamers. Fire soon encircled the Latiki, meaning they could not retreat if they were to lose. However, the fires began to spread to villages along the coast, which the Latiki then claimed as theirs since they knew that neither army could easily reach them. THen they pressed up the river towards Gadanas to launch another conventional battle, figuring that their surprising early victory had gained them a numerical advantage that would counteract their other disadvantages.
In Gadanas the two armies fought the bloodiest battle yet, and both suffered body counts above 200,000, but in the end the Latiki pressed onward and upward over the corpses of the defeated Dreamer soldiers while those Dreamers who had survived the battle made a hasty retreat into the wilderness, realizing that if they surrendered they would become slaves. The Latiki army sieged the city of Gadanas and made the inhabitants their slaves, but here they stopped their invasion, and offered a peace treaty in which the Dreamers would be allowed to hold the upland capital city of Fakarana while the Latiki would take control of Gadanas and the entire northern coast. The Dreamers knew that without access to the sea, they would be helpless, but agreed to the treaty to save the lives of their soldiers. Thus the Latiki army was declared the winner of the war, de facto control of Dreamland was given to the Latiki party, and the Latiki party assumed control of the entirety of Vaamū.
Postwar reforms in Dreamland and Paba
The new Latiki-led government of Dreamland allowed the Dreamer party to persist and dominate power in Fakarana, but they moved the capital of Dreamland to Gadanas, which remained under Latiki martial law. They offered the inhabitants of Fakarana a choice: they could move to Paba as slaves, or wait until the Latiki army cut off the food supply and made slaves of them there. The enslaved Dreamers built a 400 mile road connecting Fakarana and the western edge of Vaamū, from which they could be transported to Paba to work as slaves. The Latiki divided the Dreamers being shipped into Paba into two groups: those who would be owned by the government, and those who would be owned by individual families.
With the return of the surviving Latiki soldiers to their homes, the economy of Paba rapidly improved. Farming was restored, and fishing yields increased, ending the famine in a single season. The leaders promised to enact a nationwide system of education for children. Hygiene standards improved with the restoration of clean water supplies, and the problem of dirty diapers in city centers, some which had lain there for more than ten years, was solved when the Latiki governors had the enslaved Dreamers gather up the diapers and carry them for 4000 miles over the mountains and down the newly built road to Dreamland, where they dumped them into the river to enter the local water supply.
Dreamland-Anzan relations
While Vaamū had been fighting Dreamland, they had also fighting a war against their ally, Tarwas, and managed to conquer it. However, the citizens of Tarwas put up tougher resistance than those of Dreamland, and the Vaamūans were never able to secure a lasting peace.
Rise of the Horses
Four years after Vaamū's Latiki army had defeated and enslaved Dreamland, a new political party arose in Vaamū: the Horses. The Horses were only the third political party in Vaamū's entire history, the other two being the militant Latiki and the defeated, unloved Leapers.
The Horses launched a civil war against all other nations and political parties, saying that the Horses had the sole right to rule on their planet. Most Horses were teenagers who had grown up during the late years of AlphaLeap's rule and had never been allowed an education of any kind, but had been too young to participate in the wars that had preceded their rise. A split in the Horse party led to a massacre of many of their leaders early on, but the group survived and soon launched an invasion of the nation of Zakap, a province of Vaamū which had recently declared independence.
The Horse invasion failed, however, and the Zakaps enslaved the Horses who surrendered. Then the Zakap declared war on another new political party, the Laaatalalatataaa, an Andanese party which had no translated form of their name. However, a split within the Laaatalalatataaa resulted in the assassination of many of their leaders, and the Zakap took over the Laaatalalatataaa the way they had taken over the Horses just months easlier.
In 4145, a small tropical nation called Atlam invaded Vaamū, having just signed a pact with Tarwas promising to meet in the middle and squeeze the huge but hazardously unstable Vaamūan Empire between them. They won this war, but realized that occupying the whole of Vaamū would be suicidal, and instead focused on getting the Vaamūans who were still living in Tarwas to accept a submissive lifestyle or move back to Vaamū.
At this point, the Zakap declared war on all of the other political parties in Vaamū, claiming no alliance to Tarwas, Atlam, Dreamland, or any other outside power. They promised that they would eliminate all of the dissenting armies in Vaamū by themselves and therefore gain uncontested rule of all of Vaamū.
This war was over in a mere four days with a clear Zakap victory. The Zakap set the calendar back to the year 0 and enslaved all surviving Vaamūans who were not part of the Zakap army or a family member of a veteran.
Zakap rule of Vaamū lasted about two years. In 4149, a group of slaves calling themselves the Tinks declared war on their Zakap masters. The Tinks were mostly elderly men who had control of the slave laborers in the weapons industries, despite being officially still slaves themselves. They were among the very few people in Vaamū who had ever been to a school of any kind.
The Tinks locked their masters out of the weapons supply and therefore had both the advantage of numbers and the advantage of better offensive power, and quickly defeated the Zakap in a single bloody battle. They renamaed the country Anzan and enacted sweeping reforms: they abolished slavery and child labor, they created a nationwide school system (a promise of the earlier Latiki party which had gone unfulfilled due to unrelenting civil war), and they created a new system of government based on democracy, unique in the world at the time. However, they also affirmed the right of their new empire, Anzan, to be an empire, and therefore to revoke democracy in areas of the empire they felt unfit for self-government. The name Anzan was chosen to honor the Andanese people, who had never had a nation of their own. Furthermore, the Dreamers were aghast when they learned that the Tinks had enforced the abolition of slavery by killing all of the slaves they had earlier taken from Dreamland.
Within a few months, the Tinks declared war on their female population, alleging that they were largely disloyal to the imperial goals and needed to be forced out of power into a submissive position. Many females at this time had used their newfound democratic rights to join the Crystal party, and to declare that the Crystals were the enemies of the Tinks. The men fought the women for several months, and then turned against their children. Soon the Tinks had killed off so many of their own friends and family members that they were no longer the majority in their empire, and the empire came to fall under the control of six mutually hostile armies, each based in a different geographic region of the empire. These were the Crystals, the Tinks, the Repilians, the Zenith, the Raspara, and an allegiance of tribes living in Subumpam who protested the new form of government and preferred to identify as an alliance of ethnic groups rather than a political party.
Of the six groups, only the Raspara had received any significant formal education, and they were the smallest of the six armies. Although the Tinks had been founded by learned elderly men, these had been quickly eliminated in war and had handed control to an alliance of young boys and young girls who had promised not to declare war on each other. Thus the vast empire of Anzan was engulfed in a civil war directed by generals who could not read any language or count beyond 10. The Dreamers realized their attempt to conquer AlphaLeap had been a horrible mistake: had they merely waited another fifteen years, AlphaLeap would have destroyed itself. Some Dreamers now wanted to revive the war and invade Anzan as a seventh power, but the majority in Dreamland wanted to wait long enough to see whether it might be more prudent to ally with the likeliest among the six armies to be the ultimate victor.
Further contact with Anzan
The Tinks soon renamed themselves to the Swamp Kids and pledged to one day conquer and settle their people in Baeba Swamp, a tropical paradise protected from invasion by water and tall mountains. Baeba Swamp was near Dreamland, but Dreamland had given up trying to conquer Baeba Swamp hundreds of years earlier. They predicted that the Swamp Kids would fail miserably given the pathetic state of their empire at the current time, but were aware that, in the future, the Swamp Kids might be able to unify their empire again and become as strong as they had been when they had invaded and conquered Dreamland less than twenty years earlier.
In February 4156, an unauthorized army claiming allegiance to the Swamp Kids invaded Dreamland and quickly lost, showing the Dreamers that the Swamp Kids had hit yet another new low, as the invading Swampy soldiers had failed to even injure the Dreamers, let alone kill or make captives of them. As prisoners of war, the Swampy soldiers lived better under the Dreamers than they had in their own country.
When news of the catastrophic defeat reached the civilian Swamp Kids, many Swamp Kids considered defecting to the Dreamers. The Swamp Kids still believed in democracy, and allowed a Dreamer party to exist in Anzan, but the other side of the Swamp Kids had reacted to the defeat by vowing to invade and enslave Dreamland, taking a million Dreamers captive to avenge the thousand that the Dreamers had taken of them. Thus the Dreamer party remained underground and did not advertise its existence to the mainline Swamp Kids. This caused the mainline Swamp Kids to gravitate towards the more militant wing of the party that wanted to add a war against Dreamland to the many civil wars the Swamp Kids were already dealing with in their own territory.
In 4162, the Dreamer party in Anzan sought refuge in the tropical nation of Atlam, which at the time was run by the Crystals. Dreamland had denied these Dreamers the right to move to Dreamland, saying that they were too militant and would cause more problems for Dreamland than they would solve. After about eighteen months in Atlam, the Dreamer refugees declared war on their rescuers and slaughtered many Crystal civilians. In response, the Swamp Kids added the Atlaman Dreamers to the list of nations they were at war with, and the Swampy generals promised to do their best to restore power to the Crystals in Atlam even as they fought battles against the Crystals in Anzan. In response, the tropical nation of Wax, formerly a part of AlphaLeap, joined the invasion on the side of the Dreamers and promised to keep the Swamp Kids out.
Contact with the Baywatchers
In August 4167, a second pro-Dreamer wing of the Swamp Kids emerged and by early 4168 became concentrated in northwestern Anzan, near the border with Dreamland itself. They named themsleves the Baywatch party, the same name as one of the political parties in Dreamland. The Baywatchers signed a pact of peaceful coexistence with the mainline Swamp Kids, and promised that, unlike the earlier Dreamers, they would seek no war and would prefer to live in Anzan than in Dreamland. They strengthened their claim by pointing out that, regretting the tragic mistake that had happened in Atlam, Dreamland had invited the Baywatchers to move to Dreamland, and that many had chosen to remain in Anzan.
Baywatch War I
In early 4168, Dreamland invaded the Baywatch region of Anzan, claiming that there should be only one pro-Dreamer nation in the world, and that pro-Dreamer colonies in other nations belonged under Dreamland's control. The Swamp Kids joined the war, seeing the Dreamer invasion as proof that the Baywatchers had been lying about preferring to live in Anzan. When the Swampy army approached the Dreamer army, the Dreamers retreated in terror, as they had until then still believed the Swamp Kids incapable of patrolling their own territory, let alone fighting a war against a foreign power. The Swamp Kids finished defeating the Baywatchers by the summer of 4170.
Baywatch War II
After the war, however, the Swampies were unable to control the citizenry of Baywatch, and Baywatch decided to declare independence in January 4172. They named their new nation Tata. Tata promised it would avoid seeking unification with Dreamland, and also would not reunite with Anzan. Tata allowed democracy, and permitted multiple parties. The ruling party retained the name Baywatch despite their disillusionment with Dreamland.
In the summer of 4172, the Swamp Kids invaded Tata in an attempt to finish what they had failed to do two years earlier. They defeated Tata by early 4173. However, by this time, the citizens of Tata were growing annoyed at the constant harassment by the Swamp Kids, and many chose to settle in the Swamp Kids' territory in order to escape the Swamp Kids. This perverse logic worked in their favor because, in Anzan, there were so many insurrections that the Swamp Kids were forced to side with one enemy against another, and had to be careful in battle to avoid accidentally killing an ally. By contrast, in Tata, nearly the entire population supported the Baywatchers and there was no incentive for the Swamp Kids to seek defectors among their enemies, nor to be cautious about whom they killed.
Dreamland-Raspara relations
In the autumn of 4175, the Swamp Kids surrounded the parasitic colony of Sikel, which had been founded by Raspara several years earlier and survived by capturing and enslaving Swamp Kids who wandered within their range. Dreamland immediately invaded the Swamp Kids, having signed a secret pact with the Raspara just months earlier. Within just a few months, the Raspara-Dreamer alliance conquered the Swamp Kids and forced them to surrender.
Faced with an unexpected defeat, the Swamp Kids declared war on Repilia, a weak power in the far north that had been neutral in the war. They blamed Repilia for not helping the Swamp Kids, saying that because the Swamp Kids had conquered Repilia, Repilia owed the Swamp Kids a promise of complete military allegiance. But the other nations joined the war to protect Repilia, and the Swamp Kids were defeated even more quickly and profoundly than before. Dreamland invaded Tata now in order to gain easier access to Anzan, since Tata was now the only lowland connection between Dreamland and Anzan. By this time, although the Baywatch party was still the dominant power in Tata's democratic government, power was rapidly shifting to the insurgent Raspara party. Both parties were united in their support of Dreamland's recent invasion, but the Dreamers were uncomfortable allying with a nation in which power might change hands from one year to the next, and made it known that they preferred the Baywatchers to the Raspara.